By RON CEMMELL ' Not if league officials had de cided to use an electric can open er, a double charge of TNT, a an deal brotherly lore oration or a 1000-unlt parade of Hollywood feminine pulchritude could the 19 3 S Softball season hare been opened in better fashion than It was with that 14-inning donny brook. by Waifs and the Paper makers Monday night. About the only thins it lacked was a news reel, for it bad all the rest., A Whole Shoic. . It was a double feature In Itself. For one frame, with as tounding fielding feats being , accomplished, it resembled nothing no much as a "Pop . rye' ihort; for another, with Third Baseman Scale and First Hacker Adolph. of the Wait's wangiers, kicking the stuffed nag's hide about, it presented plenty of the slapstick a la Oliver ami Hardy; drama was' driven home, along with the winning tally, when Mounds man Roth mared a mortar shot into the mlddlepatch and won his own well-pitched pageant; and pathos was personified at those Intervals in which Arbiter Clark stood staunch on close . decisions regardless of the gar ruloas gang that looked down his throat. Dunce 1st, Hero 2nd. While Roth eventually won his own game by driving in the win ning tally, it should be pointed out that he earlier almost threw It away by balking in the Dealers' tie tally in the ninth. The inning opened with Caves going clear to second when his bounder hopped past Scales' shoulder at third. He took third on Garbarino's miff and scored when Adolph failed to trap a throw on Bernard Gents kow's ground smash. Roth forced both Bill and Dick Gentxkow to pop out. Brother Bernard mean time advancing to second on a wild pitch. Then Schwartz, who had replaced Keidotz in the sev enth, singled to score him. Henry Singer, next up, also singled to shove Schwartz to third. With the situation at that stage two away, runners on first and third and the "score 5-4 in his favor, Roth caught an attempted pitch to D'Arcy on his trouser leg for an out-and-out balk that automatic ally advanced the runners and tied the count. He went on to strike Out D'Arcy, but the. damage was done. A'eit' Setup Snazzy. If the calibre of ball played in that opener continues, it won't be long before Manager Fleshcr will have to hire a bat talion of downtown shoe clerks to put the customers into Sweetland with shoe horns. While the opening night crowd was far below standard, ball playing as was dished out in . that 14-inning affair will bring em In all right, all right. The new setup at the softball or chard should also create more Incentive for folks to spend r their dimes therein. The new ly constructed dugouts keep players off the field except when they are supposed to be out there, in the best big league style, and the humtididdy of aa electric scoreboard that was do nated by Dr. F. D. Volgt.adds its little spasm of appeal. Excuses Needed. . Pellmell: I see where congress men are about ready to adjourn, providing they can find . excuses ... to take home with em . Tis reported that Sheriff Andy Burke snagged a nice mess of rainbows out of Diamond and Clear lakes while doing a little non-political angling on the side during the state trap shoot at Bend . . . should his political angling this fall book true per haps he can go fishin every day . . . That guy Dizzy Dean can get more things wrong with him than any $185,000 bundle I ever saw . , . which sufficiently narrow's the field . . . Billy Sutton, ex-'Cat second baseman whom the Taper makers will be missing this sum mer. Is planning to enter Stan ford In the fall . . . The way out fielders were glomming onto tfiose hard chances in the softball open ers Monday night would have been a revelation even to New Jersey's Hague. i Guldahl Has Lead 4 In Western Open ST. LOUIS. June 14-(;p)-The same deft touch which carved out a second consecutive national open golf championship for Ralph Guldahl last week brought the bis Madison. N. J., profes sional a one-stroke - lead at the end of the first 18 holes of the 72-hole western open golf tour nament today. As lata afternoon shadow streaked the Westwood Country club course and old man par. 71. stood untouched by the as sault at more than 100 pros and amateur, Guldahl came loping down the home stretch with a sizzling 34. This was two under par for the In nine and gave him a perfect 71 total for his round. The performance of the cham plea, who is seeking to defy tra dition by winning a third straight western open crown, shattered what appeared destined to be a five-way deadlock for the lead at the Quarter pole. Earlier Sam Snead. the White Sulohur Springs. W. Va- Big Bertha; diminutive Pan! Run ran of White Plains, If. T.; turay Toney Penna of Dayton. O.; Dark Horsa Floyd Farley of Oklahoma City, and Ray Man grurn of Dayton. O., all pro, had come In with 72s. Voodburn, Stayton Meet WOODBURN A baseball tame will be played between Wood bum and Stayton. at the Legion .park. Wood bum. Wed Down J Pirates To Keep Lead Schumacher Mmts nut ; Bucs Until They Rally in 7th NEW YORK, June 14.-p)Mel Ott. with his 13th home run and a single, twice drove in the tying runs today as the Giants opemsd a long home stand by turning back the Pittsburgh Pirates, 5 to 3. The victory kept the National league champions two games in front of the Cubs. ; ;, Hal Schumacher, who gave up nine hits and .two walks in re cording his seventh triumph, shut out the Bucs until the seventh. Vaughan's single, doubles by Suhr and Rizzo and Todd's outfield fly gave them two runs and a 2-1 lead, but Ott 1 tied it up with his homer in the last half of that frame. j Pittsburgh went ahead again in the first half , of the eighth, get ting a run j on Paul .Waner's single and Subr's triple, only to have the Giants score three more in their half J on a walk to Bar tell, singles by Ripple, Ott and McCarthy, and Bauer's wild thrqw. Pittsburgh .'...,....3 9 2 New York . .' S 9 1 Bauers and Todd; Schumacher nd Danning.! Curt: Davis Wins PHILADELPHIA. June H.-JP) -Curt Davis pitched the St. Louis Cardinals to a 4 to 3 victory over his former teammates, the Phil lies, today, j Davis held the Phils to seven hits, six of them coming In the last three innings, and scored the winning run himself in the eighth on Slaughter's two-bagger after two were out. St. Louis . . 4 12 Philadelphia . , . , .3 7 C. Davis and Oweni- Mulcahy, Lamaster and Atwood, Clark. Cubs Beat Bees BOSTON. (June 14.-p)-The Chicago Cubs kept chipping away at Lou Fette's offerings today un til they had piled up five runs, enough to beat the Bees. S to 2, and keep the C u b s within two games of the National league- leading Giants.' Meanwhile Tex Carleton kept the Bees hitless in all but three innings, and. shut them out until the seventh. ; w h e n a single, a double and! two Infield outs brought In both Boston runs. It was Carleton's seventh victory of the year against four defeats. Chicago ...i ...5 9 0 Boston . . . . L ...2 7 1 Carleton and Odea; Fette, Erickson and Mueller. Cincinnati at Brooklyn post poned (rain). Burning Boxing Question i NO gat since the secoad Dempsey-Taxtaey rmbroglio has arwnaed awch heated argumenta as the red-hot Louia Scamelin return ga. Every oua ha hi vpiakm of how this scrap will end. and can give yen apparently eoavincing reason for hi version ef the outcome. One thine is a cinch, they cant ail be right. i . The burning question seem to be abont as fallows: 1. How wCl Louis be affected by the memory of that previous beat in? 2. Has h perfected, defease tor the Scbmeuss right handt Gets 13th Homer MEL OTT Priced Pitching j Blanks Canby 8-0 SILVERTON The Silverton Red Sox Pitcher Price held the Canby Firemen nearly hitless for seven innings as his teammates scored an 8 to 0 shutout here Tuesday night In a non-league game. A Canby stick touched the horsehide solidly just once up till that time. The locals mean while built up their lead, scoring three in the eighth. Canby hit twice both in the eighth and ninth innings but just couldn't score. Silverton S 8 1 Canby . 0 S 4 Price and Hauser; Welmer and Mitchell. Officials: Gardner and Eastman. By BURNLEY V 7 to " : r rA5T MS IMPROVED j VJ CHMELWG- POAICH THAT STARTSO LOQtS GTH ftcWO'to DCTEAT tASTTlMe ?MASAGT TAKEN tT FROM MOX ? S. Has Jo improved any since the first encounter, or is he stOl th one-track, mechanical poacher of two year ago? 4. -Can the slow-witted Bomber solve th puzzling Sehzaeliag crouch and crafty shell-like defense that spiked his gun before? fi. Will Joe lose bis co-ordination and punching power if he is nailed by that right aa happened previously, or has experience taught aim to stand op under panishment without going to pieces? On the Schmeling aide of the ledger the questions are : 1. Will the ago factor bring about Max's downfall? He is two 13m Makers and ait i Clubs Vie Tonieht 20-30 and Eagles Meet ; in 2nd Contest of Double Billing Tonight's Games Wait's ts. Papermakers. Twenty-Thirty vs. aglea. It'll be Roth against Crowfoot j and Smither or Gilmore against Kenny Larson tonight as the sec- j ond night of Summer leagne soft ball play breaks out on Sweetland. at 8:30. ; Out of Wait's-Papermakers bat tle will emerge the league's lead ing flinger to date, for both Roth and Crowfoot hung up wins In the circuit's commencement Monday night. Roth rapped a roaring sin gle to win his own ball game in the 14th stanza of an opener that had everything but hot biscuits and honey. The rest of the courses were all there, basehit appetizers, soupy infield play on up to Ice cream - and - cake catches in the outfield. "Pinwheel" Percy put his game on the ice of the record books with 15 strikeouts, his mates mean while scattering 13 clouts about the battle ground with utmost nonchalance. What the "Numbers" gang will do to the Eagles, or rice versa, is a little matter that only the gussy new electric scoreboard atop the old grandstand in center field will tell. An 11 o'clock gan der in Its direction will probably reveal the answer providing the boys don't get cantankerous and decide to stage another one of those extra-inning guzzlers of sec onds, minutes, hours and almost a whole night. Prof. Mape's Lads Meet Dallas Again Professor Maple and his eager class in base hits, hook slides, double plays, and general baseball fundamentals will make another attempt to stay the Dallas Legion nine which they meet under the lights in Dallas tonight at 8:30. The Statesman-Legion locals bowed to the neighboring nine by a 7-2 score here last week. Pitch er Kroeker having .;. too much sweep on his services for the Maple clan. Tonight they figure on a different ending. year alder now, and well past th anal fighter' prim. ' 2-WOl his fec hold np if a fails to briny; Loai down in an early round? j.Will th Teaton fold tip if Levis land hi crasher first? 4. Was that right that started Louis on the road to defeat last time merely a lucky wallop? 6. Can he avoid being cut up by the Xroois jah if Joe boxes him? Re member, Joe's jab closed the Ger man' eye even when the Bomber was oat on hi feet and fighting in a daze. . mi. I MfTPWIL Salem, Oregon, Wednesday Morning, Jane Vitt Puts Indians on Warpath :J; spi i s X s. Agl Looking thing over h With the Cleveland Indian on the warpath and now leading the American league, it look a though credit is due that old Medicine Man Oscar Vitt for their rejuvenated form. Manager Vitt;ia a hustling, fighting baseball veteran who ha made a rather lethargic club Into a spirited and determined team. He ha succeeded in bettering the outfit In nearly every department but hi main con tribution ha been getting the old drive out of a team notoriously inclined to fold under pressure. Vitt was born in San Francisco in 1890. started with the home town team in 1910, played with Detroit nine years and the Boston Red Sox for two. His past two year were a manager at Newark, N. a team with which he won the junior world championship last aeason. League Standings COAST LKAGUE (Before Night Games) W. L. Pet. .822 .568 .527 .514 .500 ,473 .467 .347 Sacramento .. .48 .42 28 32 35 38 37 39 40 49 Saa Francisco San Diego ;i . ;s J .38 i .37 ..St LLos Angeles Portland Hollywood J- , 35 Seattle .. .... 35 Oakland . 26 AMERICAN LEAGUE L. Pet. 19 .604 Cleveland New York . Bostoa Washington Detroit Philadelphia Chicago .. St. .Louis NATIONAL LEAGUE w. -32 L. 17 Pet. .653 .608 .532 New York Chicago .31 20 .25 22 Cincinnati Pittsburgh .24 22 .522 Boston 22 22 21 26 500 447 St. Louis Brooklyn -.21 28 .429 Philadelphia ..12 31 .279 Uhlan Gets Down To Serious Work SPECULATOR. N. J., June 14 (;P)-Max Schmeling settled down to real work today and for six rounds shot his famed straight right at three sparring partners In one of his briskest workouts. Al Albin,: Joe Mack and Butch Rogers were on the receiving end as Max went through one of his stiff est drill in preparation for his fight with Joe Louis for the tatter's heavyweight title June 22 at Yankee stadium. A crowd of more than 2,000 watched the workout today. POMPTON LAKES, N. J., Juno 14 (fl-Joe Louis drilled impressively for the second straight time today before near ly 2,000 fans and two ex-heavy-w eight champions. Gene Tun ney and Jim Braddock. The champion' battered Basher Dean, Leonard Dixon and Jim Howell' around the ring, for two round each and impressed Tun ney. 'Joe still has .difficulty get ting away from a right hand. declared Gene. ,Jbut he is fast on the counter and patting plen ty of power behind his Mow. He has shortened his left hook a lot sine I last saw him and ha has Improved a let in his in fighting. He seem to be tn a marvelous physical condition." Tonney raf used to predict a winner. Steele Looks Bad In Beating Solly SEATTLE. June 14-P)-Mid dleweight Champion Freddie Steele of Tacoma won bruising 10-round decision from Solly Krieger. Iew York city. In a non- title bout here tonight. Steele weighed 161 Krieger 164. ' : - .. . It was Steele's first fight In tour month and he didn't look W. 29 ? 19 59ft .. .27 21 .563 ; 28 25, .528 25 25 .500 22 26 .458 18 28 .409 J.15 31 .326 like the same fighter who won 15, 193S Xs . 1 Oscar Vitt j Angels Drop Oaks 10 to 3 in Slugf st San Francisco Noses out Hollywood 7 to 6 in 11 -Inning Game OAKLAND, Calif.. June ,14- -Los Angele defeated Oakland. 10 to 3, in their Coast league baseball game here tonight. The Angels, after opening the scoring with two runs in the third inning, drove Bob Joyce, ace Oak land hurler, from the mound in the fourth inning, after reaching him for five singles and a walk and a total of three runs. Bittner, relieving Joyce, let in four more runs In the same inning before retiring the Angels. He allowed only one more run. In the eighth Inning. Oakland tallied in the fourth. fifth and sixth innings. Los Angeles 10 15 1 Oakland . . 3 8 1 Salreson and Collins; Joyce, Bittner (4) and Raimondl. SACRAMENTO. Calif.. June 14 (JP)-Night game score: san Diego , . .4 10 1 Sacramento 5 13 1 Chaplin. Salvo (7) and Hoean. Detore (7); Pippen and Franks. LOS ANGELES. June U-(&)- mgnt game score (11 Innings): San Francisco . 7 -10 0 Hollywood ... ..6 11 t Koupal, Ballou (8). and Wood all. Sprint; Tost. Nltcholas (8), Crandall (9) and Brenzel. Becker Windmills Hef fner for Win George Becker, middlewestern windmill champ, caught up with Jimmy Heffner after 25 minutes of gruelling give-and-take wres tling at the armory last night to slap on his favorite full-nelsoa windmill. It not only wrenched a "nuff" grant out of Heffner In short order hut put enough of a kink in his neck that he had to ask for additional time before coming back far the second fall. It was just a matter of time. Becker soon angling sun-tanned Heffner Into that murderous grasp once more, and that was the bout. Becker got a standing oration from the e r o w d as he picked Heffner up bodily and car ried him out at the condaeioa of the first fall. Heffner was as limp as a dinosaurs handshake. Both opealag bout went to un precedented time-limit draw George- Wagner and Harry Elliott went to a fast no-fall draw In the curtain-raiser, with Hoosier Het Shot Jack Lipscomb and Pete Sherman each gaining a tall in the 4 5-minute event. t Lipscomb took the first by aoft entng up Sherman with solid boot to the groin, another to the chin and a Boston eab. Sherman raid Lipscomb low In the second with body slam and a toe hold. the middleweight title from Babe Risko here la 1936. He tired rapidly in the late rourds and almost got his head knocked off by a terrific right r just at the final gong. Gum PAGE SEVEN '40 Grid Schedule Is Left Undecided Huskies Object to two Straight Dates at Los Angeles SEATTLE. June 14. - (&) - The spring meeting of Pacific coast conference athletic officials ad- ourned late today, after a dead lock halted efforts to 'draw the 1940 football schedule. Graduate managers and athlet ic directors, unable to agree on a few - disputed dates and places. postponed preparation of the schedule until the fall meeting. University of Washington's 'objec tions to meeting Southern Califor nia and University of California at Los Angeles on consecutive Sat urdays at Los Angeles was one cause of the deadlock. The group formally approved the 1939 -football schedule, which was drawn and announced last fall. Earlier today the schedule mak ers aqnelched a move by members whose identity was not disclosed to discontinue the "round robin" grid program, under which each team meets the other teams of the conference. The conference announced a survey of athletic conditions by Edwin Atherton. former federal agent, was extended to June, 1939, when the investigator will make a detailed report. Y Swim Olympics Set for Tonight Another date change for the annual junior Y swimming Olym pics has placed it tonight, begin ning at 8 o'clock, according to Y MCA Boys' Director Gus Moore. Preceding the Olympics, at 7:30, Moore will meet with all boys -Interested in summer camp and will outline to them the Y's camp plans. The boys will hear a description of the Silver Creek area, where camping facilities have been made available by the federal government. Ribbons will be awarded for first, second and third places in each event of the three age groups that will compete In the Olympics. The groups include cadets, ages 9 to 11; preps, ages 11 to 13; and junior high boys. Paper Mill Downs Hansen Nine 7-5 Staging a four-run spree in the final inning the Papermakers came from behind to beat Hansen- Liljequist 7 to S in aa Industrial league softball game last night. Paper Mill .. ; ..7 6 4 Hansen-Liljequist 5 5 6 Scott and Fontanini; E. Cottew and J. Cottew. Pitching three-hit ball Grimes led his Kay Mill mates to an 8 to 1 victory over US bank. Kay Mill . - 8 4 US Bank 1. 1 S 9 Grimes and Burrell; Stockwell and Bertelson, oj a ill lib kJ V Printed to Your Individual Order-Place Your Order Now Prioco re cacoDablc o . Prompt Service Quality Work PabflnobDnn o 215 South Commercial Street Win Senators Trim Indians' Lead Drop Cleveland 7 to 6 While Yanks Win at Chicago " CLEVELAND. June 14- (JP) The W "a shington Senators trimmed the Cleveland Indians' American league lead to half a game today with a 7 to 6 victory here while the second place New YoTk Yankees were winning at. Chicago. - Johnny Humphries, young Cleveland pitcher, was rudely bumped in his first big league start. He took the loss when driv en out during a four-run Wash ington barrage n the fifth inning which included two home runs. Four Cleveland errors helped kick away the ball game although Jim Deshong. the winning picher. -kept- the Indians' eight hits well scattered -except for their three run third Inning. Washington 77 11 0 Cleveland I . .6 8 4 Deshong, Hogsett ( 9 ) & R. Ferrell; Humphreys, Milnar (5), Harder (8), Allen (9) & Pytlak. Yanks Drop Sox CHICAGO. June 14 - (J) Al l tough cut-hit, 8 to 7, the New York Yankees scored seven un earne " rai . 1 the sixth inning today to open their western tour with a 7 to 4 victory over the White Sox and southpaw Thorn t n " a, ho beat them five times last season. Except for Rip Radcliff's error, the chanpions .would have been held scoreless in their big inning. Instead, with the air of five hita, two of them singles by Flash Gor don, and two bases on balls, sev en men crossed the plate. Big blow of the inning was Myril Hoag's triple with the bases loaded. New York . 7 7 1 Chicago 4 8 I Chandler, Murphy (6) & Dick ey; Lee, Gabler (7) & Sewell. ; A's Hold Tigers DETROIT. June 14-;P)-The Philadelphia Athletics defeated the Detroit Tigers 8 to 2 here to day, blasting Vernon Kennedy from the mound in the eighth, inning with a four-hit, three-run rally. Philadelphia .....8 It 0 Detroit . I 2 8 2 Nelson Sc Hayes; Kennedy, Au ker (8) York. . . . ST. LOUIS. June 14-;P)-The Boston Red Sox combined timely hitting with three pssses in the seventh and eighth innings today to defeat the St. Louis Browns S to 3. Lefty Grove was removed from the game after the Browns pushed over two runs In their half of the seventh. Boston 9 3 St. Louis .-. .3 T 0 Grove, Wilson (7), McKain (8) tc Desautels, Peacock (8); New aom tc Heath. Sullivan (9). "SUl" Davia. Dmr-.butor Pa. 6741 nesday afternoon-